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Yakhina's novel named the best translated novel of the 2021 in France
NEW RELEASE: Yakhina's Children of the Volga in Serbia
NEW RELEASE: Buida's STALEN in France
NEW RELEASE: Shevelev's NOT RUSSIAN in France
Daniel Stein, Interpreter finalist of Kulturhuset Stadsteatern prize
NEW RELEASE: Yakhina's TRAIN TO SAMARKAND in Romania and Bosnia
Yakhina's novel is a finalist of the 2021 Prix Médicis
Yakhina's novel longlisted for the Prix Médicis
Guzel Yakhina longlisted for the 2021 European Literature Prize
Natalya Semenova wins the Art Newspaper Russia Prize
NEW RELEASE: My Father's Letters. Correspondence from the Soviet GULAG in English
NEW RELEASES: Ulitskaya's JUST THE PLAGUE in Russia, Hungary, Germany, and France
March 5, 2021: www.elkost.com is back
ELKOST website is off for maintenance
ELKOST agency at the 2019 Frankfurt book fair

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Featured titles

  • He and She, a novel by Vladimir Makanin (1987)

    Rights sold: Spain - Alfaguara, Cirulo de Lectores, Sweden - Bromberg

    Main heroes of Makanin's 1987 novel He and She (Odin i odna) are "shestidesiatniki" Gennadii Goloshchekov and Ninel', two idealistic people who were involved in student politics during the 1950s, and who could never bring themselves to kow-tow to the regime, people who realized that ‘the intellect and conformism arc two incompatible things, Salieri’. They are depicted as innately honourable, but the harsh spotlight of Makanin’s prose shows them also to be pathetic and even farcical. Ninel' is always bathetically tormented by a sense of guilt over trifles, usually involving her co-workers. Gennadii is the kind of man who gets out of bed late at night to rescue a stranger whom his own drinking companion, Daev, confessed he had abandoned in a snowdrift. Gennadii the knight-errant then finds himself in the snowdrift — pushed in by an ungrateful rescuee who then co-opts Gennadii’s taxi. In such incidents Makanin’s Gennadii is rather like an intellectual version of some of the characters created by Makanin's contemporary author Evgenii Popov — people whom, despite their fundamental goodness, life treats unkindly according to its own rather black sense of humour.

    Obliteration is the fate that lies in wait for these two people. The description of Ninel’s dream, in which she walks naked through a succession of empty rooms with tables laid for meals and looks for the ‘race of her time’ (‘vyvodok svoego vremeni’), suggests that Makanin’s text is about a generation which has disappeared, leaving no trace, like the victims of the purges. Ninel’s dream also suggests the desire that she has to ‘belong’, to be part of a collective, a desire which Makanin had examined in his earlier works. The two are unable to find common ground with the people, or even with other members of the intelligentsia; and, most damningly, they are unable even to recognize each other as members of that lost tribe of the shestidesiatniki. Attempts by Igor' Petrovich and his wife to draw the two together fail utterly, and Makanin suggests that even after death Ninel' and Gennadii would be unable to find a common tie. They will remain, as the text’s title indicates, alone.

    Read more...
  • DO I HAVE NO REGRETS, a novel by Vladimir Sharov

    Rights sold: Russia - LIMBUS

    The novel is a tale of a family whose path is closely intertwined with the fate of Russia in the twentieth century. Similar to A Trace in the Footprint, the novel follows the changing atmosphere in Russia during periods of inner turmoil – the Civil War, collectivization, the Great Patriotic War, and the dissolution of the USSR. At the forefront of Do I Have No Regrets is a family trying to find their place between a series of social and political upheavals. Critics were largely satisfied with the great attention Sharov paid to historical detail in this work.

    In Russia, the novel sold over 20,000 copies.

    Read more...

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